|
|||
Anil Kumble,
the former India captain, has resigned as chairman of the National
Cricket Academy (NCA) over what he says was a lack of "alignment"
between his vision for the NCA and the rest of the committee's.
An official statement from the BCCI for the reasons for Kumble's
decision is awaited. He is tipped to be replaced, at least on an interim
basis, by MP Pandove, the chairman of the BCCI's specialised academies
committee and a member of the IPL governing council.
"I had a three-year vision, a holistic approach for the NCA that was
not in alignment with that of the rest of the committee," Kumble told
ESPNcricinfo. "It didn't make sense to me to just be a figurehead in
this kind of a situation. So I thought it was better that somebody else
take over." In his role as chairman, Kumble told PTI, he had made 10 presentations to the committee about his vision for the NCA.
The NCA committee, as listed on website, is made up of 14 members
including Kumble. The other committee members are BCCI president N
Srinivasan, joint secretaries Sanjay Jagdale and Anurag Thakur,
treasurer Ajay Shirke, chief-administrative officer Ratnakar Shetty,
vice-chairman Ranjib Biswal, NCA Board members Anirudh Chaudhry, TC
Mathew, Rakesh Parikh, Bikash Baruah and Gyanendra Pandey, director, NCA
cricket operations Sandeep Patil and administration manager AK Jha.
Kumble is president of the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA)
and chief mentor of the Royal Challengers Bangalore IPL team. The post
of NCA chairman, an honorary post, was Kumble's first official BCCI
position since being elected KSCA president last year. He denied that
his decision to quit a day after an NCA meeting in Chennai was due to
arguments in Monday's BCCI working committee meeting over apparent
conflict of interest issues concerning him. Board rules require that any
resignation must be tabled before a working committee.
Two months ago, controversy arose
over Kumble's co-ownership of a talent management firm called Tenvic
that has on its books several young players including R Vinay Kumar and S
Aravind, both of whom have been part of recent India squads and also
play for the Royal Challengers. Tenvic - named after Kumble's ten-wicket
haul against Pakistan in 1999 - looks after the commercial interests of
the players but Kumble has consistently denied any conflict of interest between his administrative and mentoring roles.
He said at the time that "less than 2%" of Tenvic's business was related
to "mentoring cricketers", and that too without any commercial benefit
No comments:
Post a Comment